It Looks Like This
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Booklist Review
When Mike, the new boy at school, meets Sean, the two become friends, and quickly, more than that. When they are outed by an odious classmate, Mike's outraged father sends him to a camp for reparative therapy. While he's away, something unspeakable happens, and Mike is left to cope with the heartbreak. It's a familiar story, especially because spoiler alert the unspeakable event is the death of Sean in a car accident, perhaps the oldest trope in LGBTQ lit. If that's the bad news (in literary terms), the good news is the artfully laconic voice with which Mike tells his story. Though understated, it has a cumulative emotional power that engages readers' sympathy while creating a powerful sense of foreboding and suspense. Contributing to this is a secret that Mike keeps from the reader, until near the novel's end. When revealed, it invites consideration of culpability: Who, if anyone, is to blame for Sean's death? There are no easy answers to this vexing question, but perhaps that's the point of this unbearably sad debut.--Cart, Michael Copyright 2016 Booklist
Publisher's Weekly Review
When Mike's family relocates from the Midwest to a small Virginia town on the Atlantic coast, little seems to change. He has a couple new friends, but his father still pressures him to focus on sports, and bullies like his classmate Victor still see his quiet demeanor as an easy target. When basketball player Sean transfers into Mike's French class, a class project-related sleepover turns into a midnight trip to the beach, skinny-dipping, and more. The two swear to keep their relationship a secret, but Victor, bent on causing chaos, releases a video of Mike and Sean and contacts their religious parents. When the truth of the boys' sexuality becomes public, Mike must decide whether he can give into the pressure of his parents' expectations. Debut author Mittlefehldt's direct style of writing cuts to the heart of Mike's struggle to embrace his true self and to take control of his life, bringing freshness to a familiar plot. The story is propelled in small, quiet moments that steadily build toward much-deserved hope and acceptance. Ages 14-up. Agent: Brianne Johnson, Writers House. (Sept.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
School Library Journal Review
Gr 9 Up-High school freshman Mike deals with homophobia and heartbreak in this throwback coming-out story. Recently transplanted from Wisconsin to Virginia, shy Mike is mostly a loner at school and feels uncomfortable in his "old-fashioned" family. His conservative, religious father wishes Mike were into sports instead of art and always seems mildly disappointed in his son. When Mike meets Sean, unspoken attraction eventually blooms into something more. A school bully films the two kissing and alerts the boys' parents to their relationship, setting into motion horrific yet inevitable events. Mike is shipped off to a conversion therapy program, while Sean meets the same fate as so many gay teens from young adult novels of the past. Unlike in those older offerings, however, a few characters provide acceptance, including Mike's fantastically loving and outspoken younger sister, Toby. Mittlefehldt manages to make the tragedies that befall Mike and Sean not seem like punishments for being gay. Instead, they are shown for what they are: things that happened because of people failing to support and love the boys. The work is told through factual, detached narration and is devoid of quotation marks, and it can be difficult to feel a connection to Mike, who has his guard up for good reasons. It's only after tragedy strikes that characters begin to drop their defenses and show real emotion and the capacity for change. VERDICT A moving but dated-feeling examination of the costs of homophobia; an additional purchase for LGBTQ collections.-Amanda MacGregor, formerly at Great River Regional Library, Saint Cloud, MN © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Horn Book Review
Unwillingly relocated for his father's job, Mike finds romance with new friend Sean; the couple hides their relationship from their conservative, religious families until a bully posts an incriminating video of them online and Mike is sent to a conversion therapy camp. The understated first-person narrative captures Mike's conflicting emotions--yearning, anger, self-loathing, love--as it carefully sets up the devastating conclusion. (c) Copyright 2017. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Booklist Reviews
When Mike, the new boy at school, meets Sean, the two become friends, and quickly, more than that. When they are outed by an odious classmate, Mike's outraged father sends him to a camp for reparative therapy. While he's away, something unspeakable happens, and Mike is left to cope with the heartbreak. It's a familiar story, especially because—spoiler alert—the unspeakable event is the death of Sean in a car accident, perhaps the oldest trope in LGBTQ lit. If that's the bad news (in literary terms), the good news is the artfully laconic voice with which Mike tells his story. Though understated, it has a cumulative emotional power that engages readers' sympathy while creating a powerful sense of foreboding and suspense. Contributing to this is a secret that Mike keeps from the reader, until near the novel's end. When revealed, it invites consideration of culpability: Who, if anyone, is to blame for Sean's death? There are no easy answers to this vexing question, but perhaps that's the point of this unbearably sad debut. Copyright 2014 Booklist Reviews.
Publishers Weekly Reviews
When Mike's family relocates from the Midwest to a small Virginia town on the Atlantic coast, little seems to change. He has a couple new friends, but his father still pressures him to focus on sports, and bullies like his classmate Victor still see his quiet demeanor as an easy target. When basketball player Sean transfers into Mike's French class, a class project–related sleepover turns into a midnight trip to the beach, skinny-dipping, and more. The two swear to keep their relationship a secret, but Victor, bent on causing chaos, releases a video of Mike and Sean and contacts their religious parents. When the truth of the boys' sexuality becomes public, Mike must decide whether he can give into the pressure of his parents' expectations. Debut author Mittlefehldt's direct style of writing cuts to the heart of Mike's struggle to embrace his true self and to take control of his life, bringing freshness to a familiar plot. The story is propelled in small, quiet moments that steadily build toward much-deserved hope and acceptance. Ages 14–up. Agent: Brianne Johnson, Writers House. (Sept.)
[Page ]. Copyright 2016 PWxyz LLCSchool Library Journal Reviews
Gr 9 Up—High school freshman Mike deals with homophobia and heartbreak in this throwback coming-out story. Recently transplanted from Wisconsin to Virginia, shy Mike is mostly a loner at school and feels uncomfortable in his "old-fashioned" family. His conservative, religious father wishes Mike were into sports instead of art and always seems mildly disappointed in his son. When Mike meets Sean, unspoken attraction eventually blooms into something more. A school bully films the two kissing and alerts the boys' parents to their relationship, setting into motion horrific yet inevitable events. Mike is shipped off to a conversion therapy program, while Sean meets the same fate as so many gay teens from young adult novels of the past. Unlike in those older offerings, however, a few characters provide acceptance, including Mike's fantastically loving and outspoken younger sister, Toby. Mittlefehldt manages to make the tragedies that befall Mike and Sean not seem like punishments for being gay. Instead, they are shown for what they are: things that happened because of people failing to support and love the boys. The work is told through factual, detached narration and is devoid of quotation marks, and it can be difficult to feel a connection to Mike, who has his guard up for good reasons. It's only after tragedy strikes that characters begin to drop their defenses and show real emotion and the capacity for change. VERDICT A moving but dated-feeling examination of the costs of homophobia; an additional purchase for LGBTQ collections.—Amanda MacGregor, formerly at Great River Regional Library, Saint Cloud, MN
[Page 112]. (c) Copyright 2016 Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Reviews from GoodReads
Citations
Mittlefehldt, R. (2016). It Looks Like This . Candlewick Press.
Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Mittlefehldt, Rafi. 2016. It Looks Like This. Candlewick Press.
Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Mittlefehldt, Rafi. It Looks Like This Candlewick Press, 2016.
Harvard Citation (style guide)Mittlefehldt, R. (2016). It looks like this. Candlewick Press.
MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)Mittlefehldt, Rafi. It Looks Like This Candlewick Press, 2016.
Copy Details
Collection | Owned | Available | Number of Holds |
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Libby | 2 | 2 | 0 |